Welcome, there are impressions. Mondays, music, mini episode. This week, like last week, the conversation about collages continues. A new collage, the soul, is played.
We joined the conversation already in progress. It already progressed. It was reported last week. And this is a continuation of the conversation about collages.
That maybe people, some people don't know as much. And I think it's really interesting. And I know that some of the early Saburo stuff has this kind of vibe to it. Yeah, like I said, I extracted a lot of this and repurposed it for early Saburo releases.
And I would say to that, it's like the same sort of feeling, but different, like collage and soundscape with the folk implosion where you and John were kind of, there's a playful quality in those first recordings. It was a little more polished though. You know what I mean? It was sort of like this idea, but a little more polished and then really come out beautifully on one part lullaby.
And because I always think of sounds like whenever I hear one part lullaby, I can definitely hear the influence of that. Oh, yeah. Totally. Yeah, because that's so, this stuff is like tape experimentation.
It's something that I would love to do again, but it is so like, it's like so involved. Yeah. And it's also like, it really hurts my ears. Oh, actually, well, I don't know.
I mean, that stuff is abrasive. It's not what I was doing. I mean, it's no one. More than their already hurt.
Yeah, I mean, I really, I developed tonight as early. Yeah. Because when I was doing that stuff, these kind of collages, it was very, it was abrasive. And I was really into, I was into like industrial music.
Like I was into this band throbbing gristle and there was this band SPK, Surgical Penis Clinic who had this song called slogan, which is a song, but it's just this rolling, aggressive soundscape and this stuff that I'm doing, it's occurred to me now, it's like, I'm doing almost this like toy version, this almost like this, this sort of junior. It's not because a lot of the music that was industrial was like, I mean, heavy and threatening, you know, this, this one is more industrial. Or, okay, these. Oh, no.
I don't know. I don't know anyway. But it takes too much to know. But I know anyway.
So I say I have a phone to send you to do that thing. Okay, well, that's fine. But then you told her, how you told her about herself and you said, no, then you did wrong. This is what you're doing.
This is why you're doing that. And you're not going to do it anymore. I'm sorry, I'm leaving now. And you call me.
You know, I apologize. You know, what a fine you can buy. Is that what we would hear if we tapped into the aliens and their, their, their, their, their frequency. I don't know.
I know all the sounds in there. They all come from. It's like your little diary. I know it's like there was a, this AM radio sort of psychologist, psychiatrist, Roy Masters.
He spoke with this, this English accent and he would do these, he would kind of like, you know, analyze people, call in, it was a call in radio show. And he's actually, it's funny. He's a pretty consistent presence through these collages. It's one where he's like, can you imagine the perfect man having sex?
Can you imagine your father having sex? Oh, God. That's all gone by. You probably, a casual listener would not pick up, pick up on that.
But then if you talk to your mother. Yeah. If you told him this. He was, he was amazing.
Wow, did you listen to him? I did. I mean, it was, it was so awful wall. There was, I mean, I loved radio.
So it was on the radio. It was on the radio. I was always obsessed with AM radio. From the time that I was a kid, I got this little round, green round AM radio.
And I would, I put up a little map on my wall of the United States and I would just slowly turn the dial and pick up a station and hear where it was from and then mark it on the map. Really? especially at night because I would I just stayed up into that I mean I would say a pass midnight pretty routinely you know even when I was a pretty young kid because at night am radius signals travel further so I would I was living in Michigan but I could get radio stations from New Orleans and from Chicago that's closer but Canadian radio stations I mean and the way they would drift in and out and but then when I was doing these collages I was just you know just accessing am radio for you know because it's really cool to record as well and to mess with the place yeah yeah just love am radio it was your map over you traveled yeah like am stations of the world yeah I was obsessed when I was a kid living in Michigan I was obsessed with this radio station WJR like old stations only have three call letters like WJR WR and New York instead of like instead of like at some point they became so many radio stations that they're KDWB so you're K you're K because although if you were in St. Paul you would have been in the W's because to the east of the Mississippi the radio stations start with W to the west they start with K there could be exception KDWB I mean do you think it's still there I don't know it was kind of like the station we listened to and I think that's where I won my Prince for governor T-shirt when I called in it was like the hits you know yeah yeah yeah so that's my um so where was that radio station that you said was your favorite in Detroit actually I went to the Detroit Zoo what was the three letters again WJR is that still around I'm sure yeah that was where WBC that's one in Boston but anyway WJR there was a DJ named Warren Pierce and I was obsessed with him I was like seven oh my god I went to see him at the Detroit Zoo oh I love that okay I was obsessed with the DJ and I got to see him live and in person and I was very thrilled that's adorable oh my god did you meet up I might have yeah I just seeing him was enough with me in celebrities I don't have to like I don't have to make contact just to see them you're like visual confirmation I saw that we are you know I mean I don't I don't necessarily have to make that contact you know I didn't I didn't need Warren's like I didn't need to pat on the hand I just sure there he is yeah what is the appeal that's interesting how it's like there they are walking walking talking well next to the monkey cage when you become you know a fan of something it just holds a I don't know like a a little special place and you know and people are all different fans of different things for different reasons and you know sometimes people want to meet someone they're really you know that they really admire and sometimes yeah I just want to I don't know what made this guy like interesting to me I don't know everybody I love DJ I love you know DJs just people speaking on the mic and speaking and casually and sort of it just I yeah it's funny though I didn't think that I would be talking about this after listening to love me some AM radio some DJs I love you play DJ for me